Long before the days of Chinggis Khaan, Mongolias economy rode on the bcks of sheep, goats, cattle, horses, yaks and camels. Nowadays, sheep are the most important stock, constituting half of all animals raised. For each Mongolian, there is almost exactly one horse, 1.4 cattle (including yaks), nearly four goats and six sheep; theres also one camel for every six Mongolians. In 1995, there were 28.5 million head of livestock in Mongolia, an increase of nearly two million from the previous year but this is an increase of less than 2% since 1930, while the population more than trebled. Agriculture, including livestock, makes up more than a third of the countrys Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

Wheat has been grown on the steppes for thousands of years, but the Mongolian way of life took off when animals were first tamed. Livestock raising is practical because of the extensive grasslands the harsh, dry climate makes most forms of agriculture impossible. Less than 1% of the land is under cultivation, and this is mostly used to grow wheat. Potatoes, vegetables, hay and other fodder crops are also grown. Small-scale timber production along the Russian border provides wood for building material. The country has over 300 mines producing coal (17 mines produced seven million tons in 1995), copper and molybdenum (the mine in Erdenet earns the country US$900 million pa), gold (75 mines produced 4500kh in 1995), fluorspar (15% of the worlds output), uranium, tungsten and zinc. These minerals make up nearly one-third of Mongolias GDP and earn half of all foreign currency. Cashmere wool is also a vital industry. Mongolia has no active oil fields, but recent explorations show that oil can be a potential export if regional transport improves.

Central Planning & Subsidies The model of economic development adopted earlier this century by both the USSR and Mongolia became known as the planned economy. The communist Mongolian government instituted a series of five-year plans to decide how much should be invested and where, what the production quotas should be, and so on. The state owned all means of production and private enterprise was forbidden. When profits were made, they were given to the government. To keep the massive plan on course, the state created an enormous bureaucracy of economists, planners and supervisors. This required widespread literacy, and statistics on everything were collected. To this day, massive data on everything from herd size to cloud cover to geology is available. Herders and urban workers werent taxed, but they were paid very little for their labour. However, the state heavily subsidised all goods and services. Thus, medical care and education were free, though basic. Even herders in remote nomadic camps had access to boarding schools in nearby towns, pensions for the old, veterinary services for their flocks, and basic health care. The subsidies from the Soviet Union amounted to hundreds of dollars per Mongolian each year. State planning had relatively little impact in the countryside. Although the government organised farmers and herders into cooperatives, supervision in rural areas was slack, and herders earned much the same wage whether they were under or over their production quotas. The government did manage to create a few large, mechanised farms on the Soviet model. In the cities, the Russian elite could not understand why an independent, self-sufficient, proud, nomadic people might be reluctant to work in factories. Factory workers were assigned to jobs in which they had little interest, and there were no financial rewards for working hard. The government tried to encourage people to work hard by giving medals and recognition to labour heroes, but this wasnt very successful. Wages were low, but no one starved. The state provided all that was needed to survive, and though the standard of living was basic, there were no great differences between rich and poor.

Economic Collapse The Mongolians paid a heavy price for the dependency on the USSR. The bubble burst in 1991 when subsidies from the Soviet Union ended. Barter trade was halted, and the Russians started demanding hard currency not wool and mutton for their petrol and machinery. The Mongolians, however, had no hard foreign currency all they had were debts. As a result, trade with Russia dropped so fast that cross-border trade all along Mongolias long northern border has virtually disappeared. With petrol supplies drying up and spare parts for Soviet-built machinery not arriving, the Mongolians watched in dismay as trucks, buses, power stations and agricultural equipment stood idle. During the early 1990s, shop shelves were bare, people lost their jobs, and a severe lack of building materials brought the construction industry to a halt. he failure of the Russians to deliver fuel crippled the Mongolian economy. Getting food to the urban masses required petrol (gasoline). In a country heavily reliant on agriculture, farmers were unable to get products to market. Not that they really wanted to, as price controls remained on their produce, and the state paid the farmers absurdly low prices in an effort to hold down prices of basic survival food for panicky city folk.

Zud disaster

Presently, the government and the international aid organizations pledged more than US $ 4.0 million in recovery programs under which affected herders will be given livestock.